Magnesium For Tendonitis

Using Magnesium for Tendonitis problems is a very overlooked component of reversing the Tendonitis dynamic.

It's a rare hospital doctor that believes in nutrition as an important factor in health in the first place, and even rarer for doctors that 'treat' tendonitis.

As a culture we like 'quick fixes' and 'magic bullets' and
effortless cures. That's why we go to see doctors, so the great
all-knowing doctor will hand us an instant cure or at the very least, an
easy fix.

Unfortunately, tendonitis just doesn't work that way. There is no magic pill.

The Body Works A Certain WayIt Needs Magnesium To Function

You have tendonitis because your body is out of balance in some way, or multiple ways.

The western lifestyle, diet and work habits easily attract this.

To cure tendonitis, you need to counter the factors that are
leading your body down a direction of increasing pain and tightness. It
will take a little bit of effort, and it will take a little bit of brain
power to investigate and figure out what exactly is going on.

Sometimes this is simple. Sometimes it takes a bit of detective work.

Factors leading to Tendonitis symptoms can be from physcial
activity, a lack of nutrition and dietary intake, or even be from
emotional and psychological problems.

On the nutrition side of things, let's talk about Magnesium, and
then we'll talk about how and why it makes a difference for people with
Tendinitis.

Magnesium is a Master Nutrient. It's worth reading through this page if you want to get rid of your tendonitis symptoms.

Magnesium For TendonitisWhat Is Magnesium?

What is Magnesium?

We're not going to go over the history of magnesium or solve the mystery of who discovered magnesium.

Magnesium is a mineral naturally found in many food sources. Our
human body needs lots of different vitamins and minerals, but magnesium
is #4 on the most needed list.

Magnesium is a Master Nutrient. Meaning it's SUPER important. It's used in 300+ biological transactions in the human body.

Magnesium rich foods include dark green leafy vegetables,
seaweed, hard water sources of drinking water, some nuts and some forms
of wheat.

Magnesium is vital for us because it is used in over 300
biochemical reactions in the body including being required for nerve
impulse transmission and turning off the contraction of a muscle fiber.

There are many magnesium benefits, the relationship with the
tendonitis dynamic is one of them. Due to it's role in regulating
muscle activity, magnesium is a big one for a heart that works
correctly.

If you don't want to take magnesium for too tight muscles and
Tendonitis, then you want to take it for your heart, and for the rest of
your body to function in a healthy way.

Magnesium For Heart Health

I'm not going to get into details here, but magnesium isn't just important for skeletal muscle and tendonitis.

"The most important marker for impending heart disease is a low magnesium to calcium ratio in the cells."
Andrea Rosanoff, Ph.D.
Co-Author of The Magnesium Factor
Director, Center for Magnesium Education & Research

Cholesterol isn't the problem, low magnesium is the problem.

Want to know why your cholesteral is super low because of the lipitor your own but you're still having plaque buildup in your arteries (and your doctor can't explain why but wants to keep you on Lipitor anyway)?

It's because your body is short on magnesium. What you're short on magnesium, the body expresses calcium. Hello plaque!

Magnesium For TendonitisMagnesium Deficienncy

It is essentially not possible to get magnesium poisoning or
magnesium toxicity from eating a diet consisting of regular food
sources.

It's -really- tough to get too much magnesium from food sources.

It is very possible to get poisoning and resulting toxicity from
taking too much magnesium in supplement form, whether pills or magnesium
oil.

It is, however, entirely possible to get magnesium deficiency
from our usual diet. The nutrition value of the modern western diet is
incredibly poor, so it makes sense that we are eating more and getting
less and less vital nutrition from our foods.

Foods rich in magnesium should be sought after and cultivated.
This is great if you live in an urban area with local farmer's markets,
or in the country where you can grow your own or get vegetables from
locals that do.

But most people living in an urban environment only have access to the crappy food that supermarkets pass off as healthy food.

Magnesium For TendonitisWhat Causes Magnesium Deficiency

You can be magnesium deficient by not taking in enough magnesium. We don't get enough from our food supply in the US (nor the rest of the western world due to our farming practices and factory food system)

Also, coffee, and soda, and sugar, all require nutrients to process. We use up more nutrition than we take in.

Along with not taking enough magnesium in, you can also become magnesium deficient by using your muscles too much.

The importance of magnesium for tendonitis issues is far greater than the hospital medical community understands.

It works like this: The body requires Calcium to fire, or
contract, a muscle fiber. Magnesium is required to release, or turn
off that contraction.

Firing a muscle over and over obviously increases the amount of
calcium used up to contract a muscle fiber, and thus increases the
amount of magnesium used to to turn each of those firing muscle fibers
'off'.

So basically, there are two primary ways to create a magnesium
deficiency. You either don't eat enough sources of magnesium, or for a
variety of reasons, your body uses a lot of magnesium and that leaves
you deficient in magnesium.

Which comes right back down to not having enough magnesium intake in your diet.

Even if you are young and healthy person, and you suddenly get
tendonitis symptoms from some specific activity, you still need to take
magnesium for tendonitis.

The signs of magnesium deficiency symptoms can be subtle, or
obvious in the form of disease. Just remember, that it took a long
period of time of being magnesium deficient to develop the physical
ecology of having 'disease'. So it may take a while while taking
sufficient levels of Magnesium intake to 'cure' the disease.

Magnesium deficiency symptoms can be tricky because they can -look- like actual disease or other problems....like Tendonitis.

2. You don't eat enough quality sources of magnesium,
so your muscles slowly start to suffer as the ecology of your body and
the specific are starts to fail to work properly.

3. You perform some repetitive activity, whether
sports like baseball, a hobby like knitting, or work activities like
typing and mousing. This means that your are eating through a lot of
calcium and magnesium that you aren't replacing appropriately.

4. This helps your muscles 'lock' into being tight.
Different parts of your muscles can also get 'confused' and not be sure
whether to fire or let go, and not really able to because they don't
have the right balance of necessary nutrients, so they get stuck into
tiny bits of spasm, which basically starts to create a pain dynamic of
tightness, waste product and irritant, and danger signals sent to the
nervous system.

5. This all happens under the radar, slowly starting
to ache, then hurt a little, then hurt a lot, until you hit the point
where you realize that you are desperate for a tendonitis remedy.

Magnesium For TendonitisOk, So What Now?

Ok, so you've have Tendonitis of some kind, Tendonitis symptoms, and you've just read all this about Magnesium benefits for Tendonitis.

Now what? What to do with all that information about Magnesium for Tendonitis?

Now you start taking magnesium for tendonitis.

1. If you have tendonitis pain, then you have muscles
that are chronically too tight. This points to being or becoming
magnesium deficient.

2. If you notice that your muscles spasm sometimes or constantly, then you are calcium and/or magnesium deficient.

3. Depending on your diet and nutritional intake, it's safe to say you could use more calcium and magnesium.

4. If you feel like your muscles just won't 'let go',
and/or if you feel like the pain has a 'tension' element, then it's
safe to say that you could benefit from more magnesium.

I've seen some surprisingly fast results from taking in magnesium. I
once worked with a guy who had near constant cramping and spasm in his
leg. Massage helped stop them for a little bit, but when he took a
calcium magnesium supplement, they vanished.

And, it's worth it to see if this is a component of your Tendonitis pain, tightness, and other symptoms.

Like all things in life, try it out, pay attention, and see what happens.

To successfully treat Tendonitis like Plantar Fasciitis, Carpal
Tunnel, and Tennis Elbow, supplementing magnesium for Tendonitis is a
great addition to using the appropriate DVD or Ebook program that you'll see over on the right side of the page.